This
is courtesy of Norbert Casteret.
“It
attained the size of a bull, but the bones of an Ox look fragile
compared to a cave bear's. It's muscles must have been huge, judging
by the muscular insertions of the bone; it's canine teeth were the
size of bananas.
It
penetrated to great depths, exploring the most out-of-the-way
crannies.
...
Even
in narrow vertical passages, where one can climb only by hitching
oneself up like a chimney sweep, I have been surprised to find bear
traces on walls covered with clay or delicate stalagmite. Sometimes
long scratches tell of desperate efforts and dangerous slides:
sometimes, too, I have found skeletons at the foot of pits or steep
walls.
Eleven
hundred yards from the entrance to the cavern of Montespan the bears
noticed a narrow gallery opening ten feet above the water. Thanks to
their great size they were able to put their forepaws in the opening,
but a layer of soft clay makes the place peculiarly difficult to
climb into.
Nothing
could be more curious and striking than the many long scratches in the
clay, which shows the bears obstinate attempts to hoist themselves
into the tunnel. We can imagine the beasts falling back heavily into
the water, growling as they got up to try again. Some of them
succeeded in entering the corridor, which grows smaller after fifty
feet. Here their size prevented them from going further, and they
clawed up the earth.
The
tunnel ends at an impassible crack after a hundred feet. At the end
of this cul-de-sac a cub, which can have been no bigger than a
poodle, has left the marks of its little claws upon the floor.
It
is not surprising that the cub continued to explore the tunnel beyond
the point where it's parents were halted, but the amusing thing,
which sheds a light on the animals habits, is that the cub could not
have climbed into the high tunnel alone. It's mother must have
strained every nerve to hoist it up.
But
not all the bears perished alike: some fled deeper than ever into the
caverns ... the penetrating damp of the caverns caused a degenerative
disease, whose stages are strikingly shown by the monstrous lesions
of the bones still found in the caverns … There are deformed jaws,
joined vertebrae, shoulder blades encrusted with bony tumour, long
bones distorted by a sort of arthritis and sometimes grown
together..”
I
can't stop imagining them penetrating deeper and deeper into the
earth, slowly changing.
Oh, yes... This is so lovely, and disturbing.
ReplyDeleteHave you read the San Veneficio Canon? This reminded me of it, though it's a tenuous connection. Weird transformations and katabasis.
ReplyDeleteI have not, yet. Added it to the wishlist.
Delete